World-class scholars congregate at CityU to plan the curriculum for "A History of Civilizations"
Press Release
World-class scholars congregate at CityU
to plan the curriculum for "A History of Civilizations"
Over 30 world-class academics specialized in the evolution of civilizations are attending the International Conference on Teaching and Learning of World Civilizations co-organized by CityU and
The scholars are joining hands to devise ways to utilize new Internet technologies to enable students to feast on ancient wisdom. The curriculum aims to introduce youngsters to the pantheons of civilizations in order to train them into generalists capable of drawing reference from the past to understand the present.
The first part of the conference entitled “Civilizations on the Web” will be held at CityU on 6 and 7 April. The second part in the conference agenda ‘A Web of Civilizations’ will be held at
Renowned scholars from four continents will focus their discussion on the design of a one-year curriculum on the history of world civilizations. They will also explore feasible ways to use the Internet for global teaching. The web platform would allow students and teachers to overcome time-space limitations. The course will emphasize the respective evolutions of and interactions among civilizations; and highlight how they influence today’s societies.
Professor H K Chang, CityU President, has been striving to initiate and organize the conference in recent years and is excited to see this goal accomplished. Observing the growing preponderance of finance, commerce, trade, transportation and logistics in
“Only by knowing one’s past can one have a foothold on the present and set forth to create the future. Only by acquiring a broad scope of knowledge and an ability to continuously renew it can one take advantage of opportunities as they present themselves and ride on the crests of prevalent trends,” said Professor Chang.
The conference participants are authorities in civilization history. They will first sketch out a framework of the curriculum and then guide academics in special areas to develop the course materials. Doctoral candidates will tutor CityU students taking the courses. Such a global collaborative undertaking that utilizes the Internet as a platform of instruction across the world is unprecedented in teaching civilization history. Everyone on this platform would benefit from knowledge amassed by established scholars of many cultures. The platform will also address an imbalance in course content on world civilizations; up to now the tradition has been centered on the West.
Professor Richard Ho Yan-ki, Vice President (Undergraduate Education), said five years from now
He added: “Outsourcing is an emergent mode of operation in globalization. The world civilization curriculum will fit this mode well, for educators can then share resources and leverage overseas expertise. With it we’ll reduce cost, improve efficiency while adding values.”
CityU aims to broaden students’ horizons and nurture them to have a commitment to “make contribution to
Speaking confidently, Professor Cheng Pei-kai, Director of the Chinese Civilisation Centre, said, “We have learned from experience that it is feasible to employ the web to help run courses on civilizations. The Chinese Civilisation Centre has demonstrated that Internet learning can fulfill three functions of teaching: teaching morality, imparting professionalism and solving problems. We are pleased to share our years of experience with the rest of the world.”
______
CityU excels in professional education and applied research.
______
For media enquiries, please contact Shih-ying Tan, Communications Office, City University of Hong Kong at 2788-9322 or 6290-3458